Monitoring coastal northern cod: towards an optimal survey of Smith Sound, Newfoundland
Abstract The extant, coastal northern cod (Gadus morhua) have over-wintered and spawned in Smith Sound, Newfoundland, since 1995, and acoustic surveys have been conducted in several seasons since then. Cod move into the Sound in late fall, over-winter in a dense, size- and age-structured aggregation...
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2003
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Online Access: | http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s1054-3139(03)00044-4 http://academic.oup.com/icesjms/article-pdf/60/3/453/29118895/60-3-453.pdf |
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croxfordunivpr:10.1016/s1054-3139(03)00044-4 2024-04-28T08:19:34+00:00 Monitoring coastal northern cod: towards an optimal survey of Smith Sound, Newfoundland Rose, George A 2003 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s1054-3139(03)00044-4 http://academic.oup.com/icesjms/article-pdf/60/3/453/29118895/60-3-453.pdf en eng Oxford University Press (OUP) ICES Journal of Marine Science volume 60, issue 3, page 453-462 ISSN 1095-9289 1054-3139 Ecology Aquatic Science Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics Oceanography journal-article 2003 croxfordunivpr https://doi.org/10.1016/s1054-3139(03)00044-4 2024-04-09T07:55:34Z Abstract The extant, coastal northern cod (Gadus morhua) have over-wintered and spawned in Smith Sound, Newfoundland, since 1995, and acoustic surveys have been conducted in several seasons since then. Cod move into the Sound in late fall, over-winter in a dense, size- and age-structured aggregation, spawn between late March and early June and then disperse into and beyond Trinity Bay during summer to feed. The optimal survey time for biomass estimation is January–February, when the waters are ice-free and the cod are in mono-specific, relatively stationary, and well-defined aggregations with the highest densities and are typically clear of “bottom returns”. Biomass surveys have been conducted in mid-January since 1999. An error analysis indicated the main sources of uncertainty to be density variability and target strength (TS). Repeated quasi-synoptic (10 h) surveys were the optimal means of producing an estimate of uncertainty about population size. Some vertical movement led to night-time surveys consistently having higher estimates than day-time surveys by approximately 15%. Detectability ranged from 73 to 86% and deadzone-corrected, acoustic measures did not differ from swept-area densities found by bottom trawling. Biomass scaling by TS used length-dependant dB/kg to reduce the size-sampling error. Overall, population biomass doubled in approximately 7 years, consistent with a rate of increase around 0.2, largely through recruitment. The surveys are internally consistent and indicate instantaneous rates of mortality among year classes of 0.3 to >2 (very high on older fish) and provide a method for monitoring the annual biomass (cv<40%). Article in Journal/Newspaper Gadus morhua Newfoundland Smith sound Oxford University Press ICES Journal of Marine Science 60 3 453 462 |
institution |
Open Polar |
collection |
Oxford University Press |
op_collection_id |
croxfordunivpr |
language |
English |
topic |
Ecology Aquatic Science Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics Oceanography |
spellingShingle |
Ecology Aquatic Science Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics Oceanography Rose, George A Monitoring coastal northern cod: towards an optimal survey of Smith Sound, Newfoundland |
topic_facet |
Ecology Aquatic Science Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics Oceanography |
description |
Abstract The extant, coastal northern cod (Gadus morhua) have over-wintered and spawned in Smith Sound, Newfoundland, since 1995, and acoustic surveys have been conducted in several seasons since then. Cod move into the Sound in late fall, over-winter in a dense, size- and age-structured aggregation, spawn between late March and early June and then disperse into and beyond Trinity Bay during summer to feed. The optimal survey time for biomass estimation is January–February, when the waters are ice-free and the cod are in mono-specific, relatively stationary, and well-defined aggregations with the highest densities and are typically clear of “bottom returns”. Biomass surveys have been conducted in mid-January since 1999. An error analysis indicated the main sources of uncertainty to be density variability and target strength (TS). Repeated quasi-synoptic (10 h) surveys were the optimal means of producing an estimate of uncertainty about population size. Some vertical movement led to night-time surveys consistently having higher estimates than day-time surveys by approximately 15%. Detectability ranged from 73 to 86% and deadzone-corrected, acoustic measures did not differ from swept-area densities found by bottom trawling. Biomass scaling by TS used length-dependant dB/kg to reduce the size-sampling error. Overall, population biomass doubled in approximately 7 years, consistent with a rate of increase around 0.2, largely through recruitment. The surveys are internally consistent and indicate instantaneous rates of mortality among year classes of 0.3 to >2 (very high on older fish) and provide a method for monitoring the annual biomass (cv<40%). |
format |
Article in Journal/Newspaper |
author |
Rose, George A |
author_facet |
Rose, George A |
author_sort |
Rose, George A |
title |
Monitoring coastal northern cod: towards an optimal survey of Smith Sound, Newfoundland |
title_short |
Monitoring coastal northern cod: towards an optimal survey of Smith Sound, Newfoundland |
title_full |
Monitoring coastal northern cod: towards an optimal survey of Smith Sound, Newfoundland |
title_fullStr |
Monitoring coastal northern cod: towards an optimal survey of Smith Sound, Newfoundland |
title_full_unstemmed |
Monitoring coastal northern cod: towards an optimal survey of Smith Sound, Newfoundland |
title_sort |
monitoring coastal northern cod: towards an optimal survey of smith sound, newfoundland |
publisher |
Oxford University Press (OUP) |
publishDate |
2003 |
url |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s1054-3139(03)00044-4 http://academic.oup.com/icesjms/article-pdf/60/3/453/29118895/60-3-453.pdf |
genre |
Gadus morhua Newfoundland Smith sound |
genre_facet |
Gadus morhua Newfoundland Smith sound |
op_source |
ICES Journal of Marine Science volume 60, issue 3, page 453-462 ISSN 1095-9289 1054-3139 |
op_doi |
https://doi.org/10.1016/s1054-3139(03)00044-4 |
container_title |
ICES Journal of Marine Science |
container_volume |
60 |
container_issue |
3 |
container_start_page |
453 |
op_container_end_page |
462 |
_version_ |
1797583006805786624 |